Spanish Inquisition
Although the term, The Inquisition, always conjures up images of the Spanish
Inquisition, in actual fact the very first papal bull founding one was at the
end of the 12th century in southern France. There were further examples in
Europe during the Middle Ages, even in the Kingdom of Aragón itself, before, in
1478, Isabel sought permission for her version, under the infamous leadership of
the Dominican monk, Tomás de Torquemada. It was not finally abolished until
1834, ironically in the reign of the second Isabel.
Right at the beginning of our story, though, it needs to be stressed that most
legends of the Spanish Inquisition recorded in Britain were written by
Protestant authors and may have been severely overstated. Historical
revisionists, notably British historian Henry Kamen, have claimed that the
accounts were greatly exaggerated as part of what has been termed ‘The Black
Legend’. They suggest that, even allowing for huge omissions in documentation,
the total number of executions triggered by the Inquisition in the 350 years of
its existence would not have exceeded 5,000; it was certainly nowhere near the
12,000 previously claimed.
In the early days after the Christian Reconquest of the major part of the
peninsula there was a relatively peaceful period of co-existence between the
Christians, Moors and Jews. Fernando’s father had had a Jewish court astronomer
in his court and Jews held many vital high positions. At the end of the
fourteenth century, however, the passionate Archdeacon of Ecija, Ferrant
Martinez, began a heated anti Jewish campaign. In Sevilla, consequently,
hundreds of Jews were killed and the synagogue destroyed. Similar events
occurred in Barcelona, Córdoba and Valencia.
This led to a new social group being formed – conversos; Jews who escaped
persecution by converting to Christianity. Subsequently, Fernando’s personal
physician and many other high-ranking officials were conversos. When Isabel
visited Sevilla at the end of 1477, she was persuaded that many of the conversos
were, in fact, insincere converts who were disloyal to both the Catholic Church
and the royal authority. The Monarchs’ first requests to Pope Sixtus IV to
re-introduce the Inquisition were refused – the Roman authorities were
apparently concerned about papal authority being weakened - but the ever
resourceful Fernando threatened to withdraw his military support for the Papal
conflict with the Turks and so permission was granted.
Initially the Inquisition was confined to Sevilla and Córdoba, with the very
first Auto de Fé being in Sevilla in 1481, when six people were burned to death.
The Auto de Fé was a ceremony which either celebrated the return of the
condemned person to the Catholic Church – which happened in the majority of
cases – or punished him or her as an unrepentant heretic. In time, they became
great public spectacles; usually held in the largest square of a city, on a
public holiday, and frequently lasting an entire day. If you visit the Prado Art
Gallery in Madrid, watch out for Rizzi’s terrifying painting of the Auto de Fé
held in Madrid in 1680.
By 1492 – that year again! – there were Inquisitions in 8 different Castilian
cities. In the first 50 years, Kamen estimates that around 2,000 executions took
place, mostly of Jews. The resultant panic amongst Spanish Jews meant that
upwards of 200,000 of them – mainly traders, doctors and academics – left the
country; leaving a hole that was very difficult to fill as well as depriving the
rulers of much needed taxes.
During the 16th century, the Inquisition also began to target Protestants in
Spain for the first time. Of course, there were, in reality, very few
Protestants in the country at that time and, although 100 people were executed
as Protestants from 1560 up to the end of the century, most of them, in fact,
were probably intellectuals or clerics who, because of their academic interest
in the works of Erasmus, were seen as being dangerous by the mainstream church.
The church, with the full co-operation of the royal family, began to enforce a
rigorous censorship of books and ideas. Salamanca University has some
fascinating books which show the censorship marks and the cut out columns from
some of their historical texts. It was also in Salamanca that the famous Friar
Luis Ponce de Léon was twice taken by the Inquisition – the first time whilst
delivering a lecture to students – because, amongst other things, he had made a
translation of the biblical Song of Songs directly from the Hebrew
In the early 17th century, the Inquisitors turned their attention towards the
Muslims again and, between 1609 and 1614 more than 250,000 mainly Spanish
Muslims were driven out of their country. It was at the same time that trials
related to witchcraft took place, although the witch hunt in Spain was less
pronounced than in many nearby countries such as Germany, France and England.
The arrival of the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century began to put a stop
to the activities of the Inquisition. By the time Carlos III and Carlos IV were
ruling the country, only four people were condemned and burned. The end came
when the Inquisition was completely and definitively abolished on July 15th,
1834.
During the years of the Inquisition, many Spaniards considered it a triumph for
Roman Catholicism; but its costs were high. Many economically important citizens
were expelled or killed. The censorship of books and the prevention of students
studying overseas, to stop them bringing Protestant ideas into the country, and
the general atmosphere of fear and mistrust cut Spain off from many of the
intellectual developments in Europe. Spanish universities, some of the oldest
and most prestigious in Europe, became academic backwaters. Additionally, of
course, the need to protect royal legitimacy, power and prestige forced Spain
into fighting wars it could not win – causing even more damage to the country's
society and economy.
Recommended Reading:
Spanish Inquisition
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